Wedding And PortraitureA New Direction For Portraiture

For the past few years there's
been a lot of apprehension as to what's happening to the state of classic
portraiture. Now, there's an answer. It's growing, maturing, and blossoming
out. And, it's also going digital!

During a recent class in
my hometown of Sarasota, Florida, I had the privilege of expanding on
this theory, demonstrating that classic portraiture hasn't been forsaken.
It's only being transformed. It's taken a turn for the better.

Photographers are once more
realizing that people are still enthralled with faces, especially those
shown at their best--simply and with a flair for being more "natural"
than ever before. Photographers are also realizing that in order to
cash-in on today's trend one has to learn technique in order to develop
a style.

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With this in mind I finished
my five-day class with a day that went from contemporary studio portraiture
to outdoor portraiture. From window light to combining ambient light with
flash. From bright sunshine to nighttime. All in a single day, and all
digital.

My camera is Canon's D30. I
didn't have to test it before I bought it. I read many reports, but the
final decision was based on recommendations from photographers who had
done all the testing themselves. I came to the conclusion that this was
the camera for me. I didn't have to look any further.

I began my adventure for the
contemporary look in the studio. I went through a complete bridal session,
but didn't stop where I usually finished. Instead, I coaxed my model couple
to reactions that appeared to have been totally unrehearsed and unscheduled.
I have to believe that photographs like this are a welcome addition to
more formally posed images.

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Image #1 was exposed in the
digital camera the same way as film. I exposed for the main light, keeping
the fill light two f/stops less. The reading of the hairlight matched
the main light. I kept the tone of the background light so that I could
blend it more closely with her white gown. That way the faces seem to
jump out more than if I contrasted her white gown with a dark background.
You'd never guess how we lit this portrait, unless I showed you here.

Studio Light & Daylight
Although the same posing and lighting techniques work with daylight as
with studio light, you just can't move the source of daylight like you
can with flash in a studio environment. You need to learn how to light
the subject and change camera positions to accommodate whatever facial
view you choose to photograph.

Take a look at Images #2 and
#3, for instance. I used split-lighting on her face, adding my Westcott
reflector (camera-left) to wrap the light around onto the left side of
her face. In order to create her portraits I had to move her well under
the roof's overhang so that I could position my camera (represented here
by my tripod) to see the exact views of the face that I wanted to photograph.

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As you can see, I used Westcott's
Monte Illuminator (silver/black reflector) where I would normally place
the main light to put light into her left eye. My first camera position
was full face. I followed it up with this 2/3 view of her face, both portraits
in the Basic Pose. Both views of her face were made without her moving
at all. Only the position of my camera moved.

The background for her portrait
was the black side of another Westcott Monte Illuminator. I couldn't get
along without the two of them. I guess that's why they've got my name
on them.

The Search For Perfect Light
I can never understand why photographers tend to constantly search all
over outside for good portrait lighting. It's always there for you. All
you have to do is to find an overhang to stop the light from coming from
above. A tree will oftentimes work fine for you. But a covered porch will
always work perfectly.

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To further illustrate this
point I took my class from one side of the building to the other, still
staying underneath the covered porch. This was the sunny side of the building,
as you can see from this portrait Image #4 of the mother with her daughter.

Since her daughter was a little
shy posing for me with all the class standing around watching, I let the
mother hold her on her lap. We were at the corner of the building. There
was an opening close to them to my right and still another farther behind
me. The brighter light was coming from an opening to my right, while another
opening behind me provided the perfect fill light.

By turning them slightly away
from the brighter opening I was able to obtain perfect profile lighting
on the mother. Someone from my class asked me what kind of lighting I
was getting on her daughter. My comeback, "Whatever I can get!" I did
use a reflector to get some light back onto her face. The message of this
mother/daughter portrait is whatever you want to read into it.

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Window Light Can Use An
Assist, Too
The Canon D30 worked as a perfect exposure meter for me when I took my
class inside for a series of pictures by a window in Images #5 and #6.
Talk about taking new directions! The D30 really keeps me on my toes.
When I looked at the histogram that the camera shows you upon request
with each of your images, I saw that I was burning up the right side of
the bride's gown. I also saw that the shadows under her chin were a little
deeper than I would have liked for a high-key window light portrait of
a bride.

My Westcott translucent panel
solved the first problem. By placing it on the floor by the window I was
able to cut down some of the light on her gown. It worked perfectly. I
then added Westcott's trifold reflector under her chin. This brought up
the shadowed area to something that I could accept for this high-key portrait
of the bride. This, by the way, is a perfect rendition of Denny's Zuga
Green Background, my favorite.

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Notice that the reflector (held
up high by her hair) helped to bring out some of the details in her upswept
hairdo. It was tilted upward to pick up the window light coming from above,
and then tilted downward slightly, just to graze across the dark side
of her hair.

My Favorite Lens/Lenses€
One thing that I forgot to mention earlier was that all of the pictures
in this article were made using my Canon EF 28-135mm f/5.6 lens. For this
portrait, however, I borrowed a Canon EF 85mm f/1.2 lens. I made the exposure
wide-open at the f/1.2 aperture and flipped out. There was absolutely
no depth of field.

Classic & Natural
Couples seem to enjoy full-length pictures within an environment that
adds to the feeling of "a special day." They want classic, elegant posing,
as in Image #7 with lighting that appears "natural." No problem.

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There was light coming into
the room from a huge bank of open windows. The light reached all the way
in between the columns--a good 20' from the windows. But there was not
enough light to wraparound onto their faces. I simply exposed for the
ambient light and brought in a bare-bulb Quantum flash from between two
of the columns. The flash was two f/stops under the ambient light, so
I didn't even consider it being there when calculating the exposure.

Of course, there was a second
Quantum flash on a low stand behind the bride and groom to backlight her
veil. Without that they would have blended in with the background.

Window Light, On The Sunny
Side
Next, the huge bank of clear, sunny windows caught my eye/attention and
excitement. I knew that I could change the bright sunshine to controllable
light with my Westcott translucent panel. So, I had someone hold it up
on the window ledge in Image #8, and brought the bride over.

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I posed her with split-lighting
on her face, turning her body toward the camera and her face to the light.
All I needed to do now was to use one of my Westcott reflectors to intensify
the light on her face and to help wrap the light around onto the right
side of her face. A well-meaning photographer/student held up the reflector
at eye level, creating shadows that went horizontally across her face.
I told him that we needed to raise the "main" light to above her eyes
and use it just as if it were an actual light.

As you can see in Image #9,
once again the reflector was turned up to catch the light and then tilted
down toward the bride just enough to have the light bounce off of it onto
her face. The results were just what I wanted.

Naturally, I put a second Quantum
flash behind her to light the veil. Even in this bright light, the extra
light was important, don't you think?

Before long, time was running
out. We had to leave for the beach before we lost the light. One last
walk-through and we were gone. On the way out, however, we went through
the main room of College Hall. I have always done portraits there using
a staircase in the background behind my subjects.

With my new thinking, however,
I began truly looking in "new directions!"

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Photograph Into A Light
Background
When I asked the students to set me up a picture in that room, they all
gravitated toward using the staircase for the background. They'd always
been trained to look for something like that. I, on the other hand, have
recently been telling everyone to look for light on the background. So,
going in the opposite direction seemed to be a natural for us. There was
plenty of light hitting the other wall, coming in from both sides. When
I pointed that out to the students, they all were amazed and excited.

Now, facing that direction
I read the light on the wall through my Canon D30 and exposed for that
automatically. As I recall, I did set the ISO up to 400 for that exposure,
since the light level was pretty low.

I posed the bride and groom
as far away from the background as possible, in Image #10 setting Quantum's
flash equal to the f/stop, since there was basically no light on them.
Yes, there was a second Quantum flash behind the couple on a low light
stand to light her veil. That was also set to match the same f/stop. In
order to keep the same tonal values throughout the portrait, the amount
of light on my subjects had to match the amount of light on the background.
It was as simple as that!

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What's New In "Beach" Portraits?
I had no idea where I was going on the beach portraits that day, so I
decided, as always, to begin with something familiar--something that I
knew would work.

I had a great family group
all ready and waiting for me. Clothing was perfectly coordinated and the
children were anxiously awaiting directions. I chose a location in Image
#11 that would give me the opportunity to put heads at different levels.
A small grassy knoll was perfect. At the same time I wanted to position
each of them so that they would all get some direct sunlight on their
faces. Finally, I wanted to bring them together physically by the way
I leaned them onto each other and the way I positioned their hands and
arms. There's a lot being said in this family group, even though they're
all smiling and looking into the lens.

The group was arranged with
heads at different levels, everyone posed individually to look good. The
exposure was based on getting good color in bright sunshine--1/125 at
f/16, ISO 100. Since a good portion of everyone's face was in deep shadow,
I used a strong flash, camera-right, to wrap the light around onto the
right side of their faces. By bringing the light on them up to the bright
sunshine in the background, a straight print produced good color throughout.

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From this shot I turned to
another sure thing, posing Diane full-length in the same lighting situation
in Image #12. Sunshine skimmed across the left side of her face. The rest
was in shadow. Heck, by this time everyone there knew how I was going
to light her and why. It was a slam-dunk! The pose was Basic. The smile
was genuine. The clothes blended perfectly with the sky and the grasses.
And it took only seconds for the whole thing to materialize.

A Race Against The Quickly-Setting
Sun
The sun was sinking rapidly. A young teen-ager showed up then for a senior
portrait--expecting I don't know what. Certainly, not what I did with/for
her! I wanted to break through in a direction never taken before. I knew
what backlighting would do for her. I also knew what a strong flash would
do if I overpowered the ambient light. It was just a matter of putting
them together, plus a pose that was something that I wouldn't ordinarily
do--putting a contemporary flare into my work.

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Of course, it took a few snaps
before I felt that I had gotten the shot without a face full of hair,
as seen in Image #13. Thank goodness for the ground glass on the back
of my camera. I saw each image as I was shooting. I saw the color. I saw
the excitement that she and all of us were feeling at the time of exposure.
It was all there!

Hey, this was just too good
to let go. I was really pushing!

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I asked our model to wrap herself
in some of these fabrics that I had just gotten from: Backdrop Outlet.
"What? You mean to take off my clothes and just pull these flimsy pieces
of material around me? You must be joking!"
"No!" I told her. Then, "Diane, help her, please, will you?"
I later found out that while Diane was around the sand dunes with her,
she asked Diane, "You say that you've posed for Monte before?"
"For about 20 years!"
"Has he ever asked you to get undressed before?"
"Well, no. But you can trust him. He usually knows what he's doing!"
And, sure enough, out she came--her sweater replaced with the white fabric
over her bra, the other material wrapped carefully around where her jeans
had been a few moments before. And here's Image #14!
"Wow! I know that no other seniors are gonna have pictures like mine!
But will the yearbook publish them?"

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Saturated With The Color
Of The Setting Sun
I know that the color on Image #15 may look a little too red. It may look
a little too fake. But I can tell you that this is exactly what the color
of the light looked like when I made the exposure. There were no flash
or filters used or adjusting of the color in Photoshop. It was all there
and the camera picked it up exactly as we all saw it.

The sun had set, but we were
still working. I changed the ISO of the camera to 800. I could still shoot.
I measured the ambient light on her through the lens and used a flash
that was one or two f/stops stronger. I had another person standing out
in the water to my left to backlight her hair with another flash, but
we didn't turn on the receiver. Only one flash fired. It was good enough
for me. I loved it. I saw Image #16 immediately and knew that I had gotten
it.

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The Light' Gone, But I Won
The Race
Finally, after a few more family group shots it was completely dark. It
was nighttime. And we hadn't yet taken a group picture of the class. No
worries, I thought. I set the ISO of the camera to 1600 and handed the
camera to Diane. We all flipped out when we saw this.

No one could believe that the
camera had picked up this quality in Image #17. There wasn't enough light.
Where did it come from? From the D30, that's where! Who would have believed
that a camera could function so well when there was basically no light
to work with at all?

We were all happy and smiling,
despite being cold and exhausted. It was time to get back in our cars
and go for dinner. Although most everyone headed for their cars, a few
of us remained behind to make certain that we hadn't left anything on
the beach.

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It was over, I thought. Then,
I figured, "Let me try one more shot!" This camera at ISO 1600 was behaving
as if by magic.

I asked my model to run her
fingers through her hair and look out to sea. It was just about total
darkness. I know that you're not gonna believe me when you look at Image
#18, but I'm telling you the truth. The lights were on in all the houses.
The stars were all out. The thin sliver of the moon was shining down upon
us. And something/someone/somewhere was also shining down upon us. Take
a look at what this camera can do, handheld, and virtually without any
light!

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So, where did all of these
images come from? I couldn't have done any of them at all without my classical
background in posing and lighting that I learned from Joe Zeltsman. I
have been practicing and teaching ever since. Where is it taking me? In
directions that I never dreamed of before! Why? Because digital has now
come into my life. I'll never be the same again, and neither will the
profession! I don't want to look back. I can't stay still. I've got to
go full steam ahead!

Wanna come along with me? Check
out my web site: www.Zuga.net.
Zeltsman's complete course is there for everyone, too, the same as it
was for me back in the 1960s. Lucky for all of us, the future belongs
to those who merge the past with the present.

"The past is prologue." The
future is yours. But don't wait too long. It can easily pass you by.